Phillips v. Duckett

112 Ill. App. 587, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 557
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedMarch 14, 1904
DocketGen. No. 4,290
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 112 Ill. App. 587 (Phillips v. Duckett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phillips v. Duckett, 112 Ill. App. 587, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 557 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Dibell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The last will of Mrs. Sarah Munhall, deceased, gave to her children, Mary Duckett, Cornelia Jones and Samuel A. Munhall, “ all that shall remain of seven hundred dollars after my just indebtedness and funeral expenses are paid, to be equally divided between them, share and share alike.” It also gave to her six children, the three above named and Thomas T. Munhall, Fredericka Brack and Frances Phillips, the proceeds of the sale of her house and lot in the village of Forrest, to be equally divided between them, with directions for the sale of said house and lot; and also gave them the income from certain royalties from a coal mine in Scranton, Pa. If her personal estate, exclusive of the royalties, exceeded $700, the excess was intestate 'estate and passed to her six children as heirs at law. The will was filed April 1, 1897, and on May 6, 1901, Fred Duckett, the executor, filed his first and final report. In that report he indicated that at the death of Mrs. Munhall there was but $545 unpaid upon a note she held against him for the principal sum of $700 and he treated that note as the $700 fund referred to in the will, and as bearing no interest after his appointment, and reported he had already divided part of that sum between Mrs. Duckett, Mrs. Jones and Samuel and indicated they were entitled to the rest of it, and he did not deduct from that fund the debts and funeral expenses. Those he charged against the general estate which the six children wer^ to share. The effect was to give Mrs. Duckett (the executor’s wife), Mrs. Jones and Samuel, more than they were entitled to by the will, and improperly to decrease the sum to be divided between the six children. The executor also caused a monument to be erected at the grave of deceased at a cost of $150 and charged it against the general estate. The executor also ignored $100, of funeral expenses which it is claimed Mrs. Jones paid out of moneys of deceased. Mrs. Phillips filed objections to the report, questioning it in the above respects, and claiming that the costs of the monument was not a proper charge against the estate, and that if it was it should be charged against the $700 fund, and questioning that part of the report which asserted only $545 was unpaid upon the note the executor owed deceased. The County Court ordered certain expenditures charged against the $700 fund, and overruled the objections in all other respects. Mrs. Phillips appealed to the Circuit Court from so much of the order as was adverse to her. The Circuit Court ordered certain other items charged against said $700 fund and overruled the rest of the objections. Mrs. Phillips now appeals to this court from so much of said last order as is adverse to her.

Under the provisions of the will, if the total sum of the debts and funeral expenses did not amount to $700 the difference between the amount of the debts and funeral expenses and $700 was to be equally divided between Mrs. Duckett, Mrs. Jones, and Samuel, provided, of course, there was enough estate to pay it without resorting to the house and lot and the royalties, which were disposed of by other paragraphs of the will. The executor erred in not applying the debts and funeral expenses against the fund of $700 and this was partly corrected by the lower courts. But the proof shows Mrs. Munhall had on hand just before her death $100 which she had saved for her funeral expenses. At her death she was with Mrs. Jones in Chicago. The burial was at Forrest, in Livingston County, the old home of deceased. Shortly before her death Mrs. Munhall handed this money to Mrs. Jones, and the latter expended it in paying that part of the funeral expenses necessarily incurred in .Chicago. Though that money did not pass through the executor’s hands, yet it was part of the estate of deceased, and was paid out upon her funeral expenses, and that $100 of funeral expenses should also have been deducted from the fund of $700 in ascertaining what amount, if any, was by the will required to be divided between Mrs. Duckett, Mrs. Jones and Samuel.

The estate holds a note against Fred Duckett, for the principal sum of $700, dated August 4, 1894, due one year after date and bearing interest at seven percent per annum, upon the back of which several small payments are endorsed. The executor claims, first, that at Mrs. Munhall’s death he owed but $545 upon this note, and second, that from the date of his letters of executorship he was not subject to interest thereon. The court below sustained the executor in these positions. The endorsements upon the back of the note, and the evidence of a small payment by Duckett to Mrs. Munhall not long before her death, which was not endorsed, and of small monthly payments by him for her upon a mortgage debt she owed a building and loan association, by no means reduced the amount due at her death to $545. The proof appears to show but litile more than enough payments to cover the interest. We are of .opinion the court should have sustained the objection relating to the amount due the estate on that note. At common law, if a testator appointed his debtor the executor of his will, he thereby released the debt, at least at law, though equity would compel him to pay, if necessary, to satisfy creditors. Wentworth on Executors, chap. 2; 2 Woerner’s American Law of Administration, sec. 311. That rule of the common law was abrogated in this state at least as early as the act of 1829 relating to wills, section 11 of which provides that where a testator appoints his debtor to be his executor such appointment shall not operate as a release or extinguishment of any debt due from such executor to such testator, unless the testator shall in such will expressly declare his intention to devise, bequeath or release such debt; nor even then unless the other estate of the testator is sufficient to discharge his debts. The same provision was embodied in section 12 of the chapter on Wills, in the revision of 1845, and in section 19 of our present statute upon that subject. Mrs. Munhall’s will contains no language indicating any intention to release any part of this debt, and indeed as the note was given long after the will was executed it could not then have been her intention to release a debt which did not then exist. Updike v. Tompkins, 100 Ill. 406. The fact that- the executor cannot sue himself can no more operate to release the unpaid interest accruing on his note after he is appointed, than to release the principal, or unpaid interest accruing before his appointment. In some states it is held that where the right to demand and the obligation to pay co-exist in the same person, the law presumes instantaneous payment and ex-tinguishment of the debt. This is a legal fiction and usually is contrary to the fact. One result of such a rule is to make 'the sureties upon the bond of an insolvent executor or administrator responsible for his debts to the estate. Other states have refused to adopt this fiction, by which the liability of the executor or administrator to the estate is converted into ready cash in his hands as soon as he gives bond and receives his letters. The authorities pro and con are cited in the notes to sections 311 and 512 of 2 Woerner’s American Law of Administration. We are not advised that the question has been passed upon by our Supreme Court.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Earnest v. Ruppenthal
88 P.2d 1048 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1939)
Boyer v. Cole
143 A. 489 (Delaware Orphan's Court, 1927)
Richardson v. McCloskey
276 S.W. 680 (Texas Supreme Court, 1925)
Crothers v. Crothers
91 A. 691 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1914)
Wachsmuth v. Penn Mutual Life Insurance
147 Ill. App. 510 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1909)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. App. 587, 1903 Ill. App. LEXIS 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phillips-v-duckett-illappct-1904.